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Goldman Sachs denies being a creditor to FTX

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Goldman Sachs recently claimed that it is not part of FTX’s creditors listed in the 115-page court document filed by FTX attorneys on January 25. The document listed thousands of creditors, including government agencies, charities and banks. However, Goldman Sachs denies being a creditor of FTX.

Goldman Sachs sheds light on this

Goldman Sachs is ranked among the 10 largest banks worldwide, and has rejected claims that it is among FTX’s creditors, including big tech companies like Apple and Amazon.

On January 25, other government agencies were included in the “creditor verification matrix” filed in the US Delaware Bankruptcy Court. Among the names were BNY Mellon, JPMorgan Chase and Goldman Sachs.

However, Goldman Sachs has now confirmed via an email to Blockworks that there is no part of the creditors listed by FTX.

“This type of creditor matrix is ​​prepared by the debtors to provide notice to the parties involved in the bankruptcy proceeding and is not necessarily evidence of a creditor relationship.”

Statement by Goldman Sachs attributed to the source.

The spokesperson, who chose to speak anonymously, says the creditor matrix lists all of the companies that have worked with the company over several years.

FTX creditors abound

FTX creditors included in the Creditor Check Matrix included thousands of names, regardless of the 9.6 million FTX affected customers. The collapsed company owes its 50 largest creditors a total of $3.1 billion, with more than $100 million each on the top ten.

Since John Ray III took over as the company’s new CEO in November, Ray expressed his intention to revive the company on Jan. 29 via The Wall Street Journal. He said he has formed a group to explore new ideas that might revitalize the company. However, this process has yet to bear fruit.

Keep watching crypto.news for FTX and other crypto-related news.

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